Sunday, November 3, 2013

That day, I flew a paraglider solo first time, on the third day of my P1 course!!

It all started when I visited Nepal with my family about 3 years back. We went Paragliding in Pokhara. (video here) A pilot carries you in his glider, called tandem flight. I learnt from him that he can navigate the glider to where he wants, soar higher than from where he took off, cover long distances on the glider, even do some acrobatics! That itself was very wonderful and I was talking about it all the time to my friends. Then I started looking if any tandem flights were available in India.

And it turned out that there were a few people offering paragliding training in India, and that, it's actually quite easy! I narrowed in on one school Temple Pilots, who looked good. I later learned that they are the best in the country. I still took one year to summon courage, convince family and get a mate (Lakshman) to join me to the course. Finally landed in Talegaon on March 1st this year, with Lakshman.

I had already watched a few videos and read about paragliding, but on site, on the first day, it looked quite terrifying. We had to do some ground runs carrying the glider. The glider seemed to pull heavily on us, we couldn't control it, we'll fall to our side, the glider will drag us on ground, heads got banged on rocks (of course protected by helmet). To top it, one of the guys who was doing hopping flights had a fall and injured his knees. That night when we sat around, Lakshman said he'll never attempt to fly solo, and he told the Temple Pilots guys so, and that he wanted them to just carry him on a tandem flight to show to his friends back home.

my hopping flight

Second day, again some ground runs, now we seemed to get the hook of controlling the glider, and we could run longer and rather than end up falling, could stop and deflate the glider. We started enjoying the runs, it was beautiful, glider will carry us over small dips on the ground, the legs won't go down into them. Our trainers will give us instructions over radio, to which we now got accustomed, which actually we couldn't listen and obey on the first day, due to the nervousness. Towards the end of the day, they made us fly hopping flights, from a small height, which itself was quite exhilarating. That night when we sat down, we were really happy, and were looking forward to our last day, when we'll be taken for solo flights, from the top of the hill!

On the final day, I did 4 solo flights. It was beyond words. When I got to top of the hill first time, it was actually terrifying again, the top was just a narrow ridge, with strong winds. We knew from our theory classes that, on the other side of the hill, that's the leeward side of the hill, there are going to be rotors and eddies which is dangerous and no-go for paragliding. It was with heavily beating hearts that we inflated our gliders, assisted by Ankush, our trainer, and then took off. Once in the air, wow, it was amazing, I was flying by myself!!. Ganpath the trainer with radio on ground gave instructions, and I took my turns, reached landing site, did the final flare, and landed on my feet! The flight lasted about one and half minute. But it was wonderful. I had three more flights, and after each flight, was racing back to the top of the 200 feet hill, for a chance at it again.

But the man who enjoyed the most on the day was Lakshman, who on first day said he'll never do solo flight. His first attempt at inflation failed and he fell down, which further scared him. He actually backed out of further attempts but Ankush didnt release him from the glider, quickly inflated it, and sent him off. After landing, he was laughing so much and jumping around, more than all others who did solo.

So, now, we are P1 certified pilots. it doesn't actually mean much. There's so much more to learn, proper launch technics, soaring, thermalling etc. But it all looks exciting and we are determined to carry on ahead with P2, certification course and beyond. It's said that paragliding is initially 90% physical and 10% mental, but later, 10% physical and 90% mental. It already looks to be true, and we are least worried now and quite excited.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

You can save your contacts in a simple text file (created with notepad or alternately exported from Excel) and then import from Gmail.
This link contains the directions from Google about how to do this: https://support.google.com/mail/answer/12119#

A few points to note are:

1. The individual fields need not be contained in an apostrophe, which many spreadsheet programs insert.
2. There should be a header line which names each field.
3. 'Name' field (alternately it can be 'First Name', 'Last Name' etc) and 'E-mail Address' fields are required. It's E-mail no Email as given in google help page.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

The following is from Introduction chapter in 'The little black book on computer viruses' by Mark Ludwig

This is the first in a series of three books about computer
viruses. In these volumes I want to challenge you to think in new
ways about viruses, and break down false concepts and wrong ways
of thinking, and go on from there to discuss the relevance of
computer viruses in today’s world. These books are not a call to a
witch hunt, or manuals for protecting yourself from viruses. On the
contrary, they will teach you how to design viruses, deploy them,
and make them better. All three volumes are full of source code for
viruses, including both new and well known varieties.
It is inevitable that these books will offend some people.

In fact, I hope they do. They need to. I am convinced that computer

viruses are not evil and that programmers have a right to create

them, posses them and experiment with them. That kind of a stand

is going to offend a lot of people, no matter how it is presented.

Even a purely technical treatment of viruses which simply dis-

cussed how to write them and provided some examples would be

offensive. The mere thought of a million well armed hackers out

there is enough to drive some bureaucrats mad. These books go

beyond a technical treatment, though, to defend the idea that viruses

can be useful, interesting, and just plain fun. That is bound to prove

even more offensive. Still, the truth is the truth, and it needs to be

spoken, even if it is offensive. Morals and ethics cannot be deter-

mined by a majority vote, any more than they can be determined

by the barrel of a gun or a loud mouth. Might does not make right.

If you turn out to be one of those people who gets offended

or upset, or if you find yourself violently disagreeing with some-

thing I say, just remember what an athletically minded friend of

mine once told me: “No pain, no gain.” That was in reference to

muscle building, but the principle applies intellectually as well as

physically. If someone only listens to people he agrees with, he will

never grow and he’ll never succeed beyond his little circle of

yes-men. On the other hand, a person who listens to different ideas

at the risk of offense, and who at least considers that he might be

wrong, cannot but gain from it. So if you are offended by something

in this book, please be critical—both of the book and of yourself—

and don’t fall into a rut and let someone else tell you how to think.

From the start I want to stress that I do not advocate

anyone’s going out and infecting an innocent party’s computer

system with a malicious virus designed to destroy valuable data or

bring their system to a halt. That is not only wrong, it is illegal. If

you do that, you could wind up in jail or find yourself being sued

for millions. However this does not mean that it is illegal to create

a computer virus and experiment with it, even though I know some

people wish it was. If you do create a virus, though, be careful with

it. Make sure you know it is working properly or you may wipe out

your own system by accident. And make sure you don’t inadver-

tently release it into the world, or you may find yourself in a legal

jam . . . even if it was just an accident. The guy who loses a year’s

worth of work may not be so convinced that it was an accident. And

soon it may be illegal to infect a computer system (even your own)

with a benign virus which does no harm at all. The key word here

is responsibility. Be responsible. If you do something destructive,

be prepared to take responsibility. The programs included in this

book could be dangerous if improperly used. Treat them with the

respect you would have for a lethal weapon.

This first of three volumes is a technical introduction to the

basics of writing computer viruses. It discusses what a virus is, and

how it does its job, going into the major functional components of

the virus, step by step. Several different types of viruses are

developed from the ground up, giving the reader practical how-to

information for writing viruses. That is also a prerequisite for

decoding and understanding any viruses one may run across in his

day to day computing. Many people think of viruses as sort of a

black art. The purpose of this volume is to bring them out of the

closet and look at them matter-of-factly, to see them for what they

are, technically speaking: computer programs.

The second volume discusses the scientific applications of

computer viruses. There is a whole new field of scientific study

known as artificial life (AL) research which is opening up as a result

of the invention of viruses and related entities. Since computer

viruses are functionally similar to living organisms, biology can

teach us a lot about them, both how they behave and how to make

them better. However computer viruses also have the potential to

teach us something about living organisms. We can create and

control computer viruses in a way that we cannot yet control living

organisms. This allows us to look at life abstractly to learn about

what it really is. We may even reflect on such great questions as the

beginning and subsequent evolution of life.

The third volume of this series discusses military applica-

tions for computer viruses. It is well known that computer viruses

can be extremely destructive, and that they can be deployed with

minimal risk. Military organizations throughout the world know

that too, and consider the possibility of viral attack both a very real

threat and a very real offensive option. Some high level officials in

various countries already believe their computers have been at-

tacked for political reasons. So the third volume will probe military

strategies and real-life attacks, and dig into the development of viral

weapon systems, defeating anti-viral defenses, etc.

You might be wondering at this point why you should

spend time studying these volumes. After all, computer viruses

apparently have no commercial value apart from their military

applications. Learning how to write them may not make you more

employable, or give you new techniques to incorporate into pro-

grams. So why waste time with them, unless you need them to sow

chaos among your enemies? Let me try to answer that: Ever since

computers were invented in the 1940’s, there has been a brother-

hood of people dedicated to exploring the limitless possibilities of

these magnificent machines. This brotherhood has included famous

mathematicians and scientists, as well as thousands of unnamed

hobbyists who built their own computers, and programmers who

love to dig into the heart of their machines. As long as computers

have been around, men have dreamed of intelligent machines which

would reason, and act without being told step by step just what to

do. For many years this was purely science fiction. However, the

very thought of this possibility drove some to attempt to make it a

reality. Thus “artificial intelligence” was born. Yet AI applications

are often driven by commercial interests, and tend to be colored by

that fact. Typical results are knowledge bases and the like—useful,

sometimes exciting, but also geared toward putting the machine to

use in a specific way, rather than to exploring it on its own terms.

The computer virus is a radical new approach to this idea

of “living machines.” Rather than trying to design something which

poorly mimics highly complex human behavior, one starts by trying

to copy the simplest of living organisms. Simple one-celled organ-

isms don’t do very much. The most primitive organisms draw

nutrients from the sea in the form of inorganic chemicals, and take

energy from the sun, and their only goal is apparently to survive

and to reproduce. They aren’t very intelligent, and it would be tough

to argue about their metaphysical aspects like “soul.” Yet they do

what they were programmed to do, and they do it very effectively.

If we were to try to mimic such organisms by building a machine—

a little robot—which went around collecting raw materials and

putting them together to make another little robot, we would have

a very difficult task on our hands. On the other hand, think of a

whole new universe—not this physical world, but an electronic one,

which exists inside of a computer. Here is the virus’ world. Here it

can “live” in a sense not too different from that of primitive

biological life. The computer virus has the same goal as a living

organism—to survive and to reproduce. It has environmental ob-

stacles to overcome, which could “kill” it and render it inoperative.

And once it is released, it seems to have a mind of its own. It runs

off in its electronic world doing what it was programmed to do. In

this sense it is very much alive.

There is no doubt that the beginning of life was an impor-

tant milestone in the history of the earth. However, if one tries to

consider it from the viewpoint of inanimate matter, it is difficult to

imagine life as being much more than a nuisance. We usually

assume that life is good and that it deserves to be protected.

However, one cannot take a step further back and see life as

somehow beneficial to the inanimate world. If we consider only the

atoms of the universe, what difference does it make if the tempera-

ture is seventy degrees farenheit or twenty million? What difference

would it make if the earth were covered with radioactive materials?

None at all. Whenever we talk about the environment and ecology,

we always assume that life is good and that it should be nurtured

and preserved. Living organisms universally use the inanimate

world with little concern for it, from the smallest cell which freely

gathers the nutrients it needs and pollutes the water it swims in,

right up to the man who crushes up rocks to refine the metals out

of them and build airplanes. Living organisms use the material

world as they see fit. Even when people get upset about something

like strip mining, or an oil spill, their point of reference is not that

of inanimate nature. It is an entirely selfish concept (with respect

to life) that motivates them. The mining mars the beauty of the

landscape—a beauty which is in the eye of the (living) beholder—

and it makes it uninhabitable. If one did not place a special

emphasis on life, one could just as well promote strip mining as an

attempt to return the earth to its pre-biotic state!

I say all of this not because I have a bone to pick with

ecologists. Rather I want to apply the same reasoning to the world

of computer viruses. As long as one uses only financial criteria to

evaluate the worth of a computer program, viruses can only be seen

as a menace. What do they do besides damage valuable programs

and data? They are ruthless in attempting to gain access to the

computer system resources, and often the more ruthless they are,

the more successful. Yet how does that differ from biological life?

If a clump of moss can attack a rock to get some sunshine and grow,

it will do so ruthlessly. We call that beautiful. So how different is

that from a computer virus attaching itself to a program? If all one

is concerned about is the preservation of the inanimate objects

(which are ordinary programs) in this electronic world, then of

course viruses are a nuisance.

But maybe there is something deeper here. That all depends

on what is most important to you, though. It seems that modern

culture has degenerated to the point where most men have no higher

goals in life than to seek their own personal peace and prosperity.

By personal peace, I do not mean freedom from war, but a freedom

to think and believe whatever you want without ever being chal-

lenged in it. More bluntly, the freedom to live in a fantasy world of

your own making. By prosperity, I mean simply an ever increasing

abundance of material possessions. Karl Marx looked at all of

mankind and said that the motivating force behind every man is his

economic well being. The result, he said, is that all of history can

be interpreted in terms of class struggles—people fighting for

economic control. Even though many in our government decry

Marx as the father of communism, our nation is trying to squeeze

into the straight jacket he has laid for us. That is why two of George

Bush’s most important campaign promises were “four more years

of prosperity” and “no new taxes.” People vote their wallets, even

when they know the politicians are lying through the teeth.

In a society with such values, the computer becomes

merely a resource which people use to harness an abundance of

information and manipulate it to their advantage. If that is all there

is to computers, then computer viruses are a nuisance, and they

should be eliminated. Surely there must be some nobler purpose

for mankind than to make money, though, even though that may be

necessary. Marx may not think so. The government may not think

so. And a lot of loud-mouthed people may not think so. Yet great

men from every age and every nation testify to the truth that man

does have a higher purpose. Should we not be as Socrates, who

considered himself ignorant, and who sought Truth and Wisdom,

and valued them more highly than silver and gold? And if so, the

question that really matters is not how computers can make us

wealthy or give us power over others, but how they might make us

wise. What can we learn about ourselves? about our world? and,

yes, maybe even about God? Once we focus on that, computer

viruses become very interesting. Might we not understand life a

little better if we can create something similar, and study it, and try

to understand it? And if we understand life better, will we not

understand our lives, and our world better as well?

A word of caution first: Centuries ago, our nation was

established on philosophical principles of good government, which

were embodied in the Declaration of Independence and the Consti-

tution. As personal peace and prosperity have become more impor-

tant than principles of good government, the principles have been

manipulated and redefined to suit the whims of those who are in

power. Government has become less and less sensitive to civil

rights, while it has become easy for various political and financial

interests to manipulate our leaders to their advantage.

Since people have largely ceased to challenge each other

in what they believe, accepting instead the idea that whatever you

want to believe is OK, the government can no longer get people to

obey the law because everyone believes in a certain set of principles

upon which the law is founded. Thus, government must coerce

people into obeying it with increasingly harsh penalties for disobe-

dience—penalties which often fly in the face of long established

civil rights. Furthermore, the government must restrict the average

man’s ability to seek recourse. For example, it is very common for

the government to trample all over long standing constitutional

rights when enforcing the tax code. The IRS routinely forces

hundreds of thousands of people to testify against themselves. It

routinely puts the burden of proof on the accused, seizes his assets

without trial, etc., etc. The bottom line is that it is not expedient for

the government to collect money from its citizens if it has to prove

their tax documents wrong. The whole system would break down

in a massive overload. Economically speaking, it is just better to

put the burden of proof on the citizen, Bill of Rights or no.

Likewise, to challenge the government on a question of

rights is practically impossible, unless your case happens to serve

the purposes of some powerful special interest group. In a standard

courtroom, one often cannot even bring up the subject of constitu-

tional rights. The only question to be argued is whether or not some

particular law was broken. To appeal to the Supreme Court will cost

millions, if the politically motivated justices will even condescend

to hear the case. So the government becomes practically all-pow-

erful, God walking on earth, to the common man. One man seems

to have little recourse but to blindly obey those in power.

When we start talking about computer viruses, we’re tread-

ing on some ground that certain people want to post a “No Tres-

passing” sign on. The Congress of the United States has considered

a “Computer Virus Eradication Act” which would make it a felony

to write a virus, or for two willing parties to exchange one. Never

mind that the Constitution guarantees freedom of speech and

freedom of the press. Never mind that it guarantees the citizens the

right to bear military arms (and viruses might be so classified).

While that law has not passed as of this writing, it may by the time

you read this book. If so, I will say without hesitation that it is a

miserable tyranny, but one that we can do little about . . . for now.

Some of our leaders may argue that many people are not

capable of handling the responsibility of power that comes with

understanding computer viruses, just as they argue that people are

not able to handle the power of owning assault rifles or machine

guns. Perhaps some cannot. But I wonder, are our leaders any better

able to handle the much more dangerous weapons of law and

limitless might? Obviously they think so, since they are busy trying

to centralize all power into their own hands. I disagree. If those in

government can handle power, then so can the individual. If the

individual cannot, then neither can his representatives, and our end

is either tyranny or chaos anyhow. So there is no harm in attempting

to restore some small power to the individual.

But remember: truth seekers and wise men have been

persecuted by powerful idiots in every age. Although computer

viruses may be very interesting and worthwhile, those who take an

interest in them may face some serious challenges from base men.

So be careful.

Now join with me and take the attitude of early scientists.

These explorers wanted to understand how the world worked—and

whether it could be turned to a profit mattered little. They were

trying to become wiser in what’s really important by understanding

the world a little better. After all, what value could there be in

building a telescope so you could see the moons around Jupiter?

Galileo must have seen something in it, and it must have meant

enough to him to stand up to the ruling authorities of his day and

do it, and talk about it, and encourage others to do it. And to land

in prison for it. Today some people are glad he did.

So why not take the same attitude when it comes to creating

life on a computer? One has to wonder where it might lead. Could

there be a whole new world of electronic life forms possible, of

which computer viruses are only the most rudimentary sort? Per-

haps they are the electronic analog of the simplest one-celled

creatures, which were only the tiny beginning of life on earth. What

would be the electronic equivalent of a flower, or a dog? Where

could it lead? The possibilities could be as exciting as the idea of a

man actually standing on the moon would have been to Galileo. We

just have no idea.

There is something in certain men that simply drives them

to explore the unknown. When standing at the edge of a vast ocean

upon which no ship has ever sailed, it is difficult not to wonder what

lies beyond the horizon just because the rulers of the day tell you

you’re going to fall of the edge of the world (or they’re going to

push you off) if you try to find out. Perhaps they are right. Perhaps

there is nothing of value out there. Yet other great explorers down

through the ages have explored other oceans and succeeded. And

one thing is for sure: we’ll never know if someone doesn’t look. So

I would like to invite you to climb aboard this little raft that I have

Friday, February 22, 2013

Gadaikal is a good trekking spot near Mangalore. It's about 65 km from Mangalore, near the town of Belthangdi, on the way to famous Dharmasthala. There are lots of buses from Mangalore to Dharmasthala, you have to get down at Belhangdi, and take an auto to Gadaikal, which is about 8 km from there.

Gadaikal is a vertical stone about 1700 feet high. Tippu Sulthan had built a small fort at the very top, may be because it's the tallest place in the vicinity, and affords an all round view over the area. He had constructed steps till the very top, which makes the climb possible, on a vertical stone. Apart from the steps and small constructions, there are no much man made objects. The sport is remarkably free from plastic throw aways too. The view from the top is amazing, magnificent Coorg hills can be seen at a distance.

Do carry lots of water (2L per person) and small snacks. Nothing is available on the top. Those scared of heights beware, at places, it's so scary that you may find it difficult to come down.